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Fall 2004 Colloquium Series
Kanna Rajan ![Kanna Rajan [photo]](../images/rajan.jpg)
What I Learned from Commanding Spirit and Opportunity:
Lessons Learned from Deploying MAPGEN for NASA's Mars Exploration Rover
Mission
Wednesday, October 20,
2004
Building 3 Auditorium - 3:30 PM
(Refreshments at 3:00 PM)
Dr. Kanna Rajan, will talk about "What I Learned
from Commanding Spirit and Opportunity: Lessons Learned from Deploying
MAPGEN for NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Mission." In September
2001, the MER mission chose to use MAPGEN, a ground based decision-support
system to help command Spirit and Opportunity. On Jan 15th 2004, MAPGEN
became the first AI based system to actually command a vehicle on the
surface of another planet when the first surface plan for the Spirit
rover was successfully built radiated and executed on-board. This talk
is the tumultuous story of MAPGEN's infusion process and the lessons
we took away in doing so.
The Mixed-Initiative Activity Plan GENerator (MAPGEN) combines a rich
formalism of a flexible temporal constraint network with a familiar
front end used by mission operations personnel at JPL, to command the
two MER rovers. Mission operators with the help of science personnel,
use MAPGEN on the ground, on the two rovers to build a complex conflict
free plan that is packaged and uplinked to command Spirit and Opportunity
on the surface of Mars. This generative planner, automatically enforces
mission and flight rules encased in a declarative model, as well as
constraints imposed to encode the scientific intent of the observations
for that Sol, requiring to being done on the surface of the Red Planet.
MAPGEN continues to be a part of the mission-critical uplink command
cycle for the Mars Exploration Rovers (see http://ic.arc.nasa.gov/story.php?sid=106&sec=space).
Kanna is a Senior Research Scientist and a member of
the management team of the the Autonomy and Robotics Area at NASA Ames
Research Center Moffett Field, California. He is one of the principals
of the Remote Agent Experiment (RAX) which designed, built, tested and
flew the first AI based closed-loop control system on a spacecraft.
The RA was the co-winner of NASA's 1999 Software of the Year, the agency's
highest technical award (http://ic.arc.nasa.gov/projects/remote-agent/).
His interests are in Planning/Scheduling, modeling and representation
for real world planners and agent architectures for Distributed Control
applications. Prior to joining Ames, he was in the doctoral program
at the Courant Institute of Math Sciences at NYU. Prior to that he was
at the Knowledge Systems group at American Airlines, helping build a
Maintenance Routing scheduler (MOCA) which continues to be used by the
airline 365 days of the year.
MAPGEN has been awarded NASA's 2004 Turning Goals into Reality award
under the Administrators Award category, a NASA Space Act Award, a NASA
Group Achievement Award and a NASA Ames Honor Award. Kanna is the recipient
of the 2002 NASA Public Service Medal and the First NASA Ames Information
Directorate Infusion Award also in 2002. On Oct 12th 2004 at JPL, he
will receive an Exceptional Service Medal for the successful deployment
of MAPGEN for MER.
He is the Co-chair of the 2005 Intnl. Conference on Automated Planning
and Scheduling (ICAPS), to be held in Monterey California (http://icaps05.icaps-conference.org/)
and the chair of the Executive Board of the International Workshop on
Planning and Scheduling for Space.
IS&T Colloquium Committee Host: Jacqueline LeMoigne,
Jacqueline.J.LeMoigne-Stewart@nasa.gov
Sign language interpreter upon request: 301-286-8313
Request future announcements: kjeter@pop200.gsfc.nasa.gov
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